You Can Get Free Pizza Hut If You Ruin Your Dinner This Month

Photo: Pizza Hut (Fair Use)

Photo: Pizza Hut (Fair Use)

The holidays can be a chaotic time when you have a full house, and you’re just trying to do your best to impress the in-laws with your cooking. You certainly wouldn’t be the first person to burn your would-be fancy dinner, but this year, a burnt casserole or overly dried-out turkey doesn’t have to ruin the evening: There’s a small chance at redemption for some Pizza Hut customers.

The Pizza Hut Holiday Rescue gives customers a chance to win a free Triple Treat Box, which consists of two medium, one-topping pizzas, five breadsticks and 10 Cinnabon Mini Rolls. You just need to provide the company with photographic proof of your culinary disadvantages:

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How to enter the Pizza Hut Holiday Rescue

The sweepstakes will run from Dec. 1 to Dec. 24; each day, one winner will be selected from among all the terrible cooks who sent a picture of their ruined dinner to the chain’s “holiday rescue line,” [email protected]. The winner of each day will receive the limited edition Triple Treat Box and will be announced on the following day by email. If you did not win on the day you entered, you will be automatically entered to the following day. You can send up to one entry per day to maximize your chances of winning (assuming you’re a really terrible cook).

There can only be one entry per household and per email. You can read more about the rules and limitations here. The sweepstakes was created after Pizza Hut ran a survey in which they found that 60% of Americans said the holidays caused stress, over half admitted to ruining a holiday dish, and 62% of people said they wished they had ordered a pizza instead of prepping a big holiday meal. Now maybe they can get that pizza for free.

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Internet Praises Ukrainian’s Cooking Mid-Blackout: ‘Resilience’

A Ukrainian man has gone viral on TikTok after showing his followers how he prepares dinner amidst the blackouts in his country, with some users praising his “resilience.”

In the video, TikTok user Gregory Donchik (gregorydonchik13) showed how he had to get creative to cook a pasta dish. The clip begins with a man dousing pieces of coal in an aluminum foil-covered pot with lighter fluid. He then prepared chicken, coating the meat with seasonings before sliding it into a frying pan, which was placed above the coals to cook.

After the chicken is finished, it cooks up a medley of vegetables in a frying pan and adds the meat. After boiling a pot of pasta and adding cream to the mixture, he’s left with what looks like a delicious and filling dinner.

Dutch oven filled with coal
This stock image shows a dutch oven filled with coal over a fire. A video of a Ukrainian man cooking dinner during a blackout has been viewed millions of times on TikTok.
Getty

Ukrainians have faced ongoing blackouts as a result of the country’s war with Russia after President Vladimir Putin launched an invasion in February.

In a Facebook post on Monday, Sergey Kovalenko, CEO of the Ukrainian energy provider YASNO, said the country could face several more months of power outages. The outages are a result of attacks on Ukraine’s power grid by Russian forces.

Since being shared on November 29, the viral TikTok post has attracted some 10.6 million views as well as more than 974,500 likes.

The overwhelming majority of those posting in the comments praised the man’s cooking—although some believed the pasta was a bit overcooked.

TikTok user Your Mr. Ice said: “Bro in Ukraine and still eat better than me.”

Amanda Patterson posted: “Bro’s in the middle of a war and people are still like ‘pasta’s overcooked,’ like brah at least they are alive.”

Khaled added: “If Ukraine eats like this, I’m moving there. That’s better than what I ate in my entire life.”

While Jamie commented: “Your resilience and bravery give me hope. your meal looks beautiful. keep finding light in the dark, friend”

Others cautioned Donchik of the health risks that come from cooking with coal while indoors.

“Please be careful. Coals produce carbon monoxide, a colorless odorless, and poisonous gas. Idk (I don’t know) if your outside but please do this outside if possible,” user Your Proud Dad wrote in the comments.

According to the World Health Organization, cooking with coal generates harmful household air pollution that can cause serious health risks, such as cancer. It is noted that each year 3.2 million people worldwide die prematurely from illnesses attributable to household air pollution caused while using certain fuels for cooking.

The WHO added: “6 percent are from lung cancer: approximately 11 percent of lung cancer deaths in adults are attributable to exposure to carcinogens from household air pollution caused by using kerosene or solid fuels such as wood, charcoal or coal for household energy needs.”

Newsweek reached out to gregorydonchik13 for comment.

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Ground beef taco recipe has a surprise ingredients: oatmeal : NPR

This recipe started in Arizona. Now, sisters Kirsten Ayles (left), in San Clemente, Calif., and Alexis Wold, in New York City, make it on opposite coasts. Right: A family photo of their grandparents’ restaurant, Odd’s Sombrero in Wickenburg, Ariz.

Alexis Wold/Collage by NPR


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Alexis Wold/Collage by NPR


This recipe started in Arizona. Now, sisters Kirsten Ayles (left), in San Clemente, Calif., and Alexis Wold, in New York City, make it on opposite coasts. Right: A family photo of their grandparents’ restaurant, Odd’s Sombrero in Wickenburg, Ariz.

Alexis Wold/Collage by NPR

All Things We’re Cooking is a series featuring family recipes from you, our readers and listeners, and the special stories behind them. We’ll continue to share more of your kitchen gems throughout the holidays.

For as long as she can remember, from growing up in New Mexico to living in New York City today, Alexis Wold has made taco meat the same way — using the recipe from Odd’s Sombrero, the restaurant her grandparents owned in Wickenburg, Ariz.

The restaurant was named after Wold’s paternal grandfather, Odd, who moved out to Arizona with his wife in the 1940s from Chicago. The pair decided to open a restaurant that served diner food. It wasn’t until Wold’s grandmother hired a woman named Carmen Macias that the menu changed.

“​​She was a young lady and she suggested that they add Mexican food to the menu,” Wold said. “And my grandmother being … fairly new to the Southwest around that time, she said, ‘I don’t know anything about Mexican food. I can’t make that.’ And [Macias] said, ‘Well, I can.'”

Macias went on to share his family’s recipes with the Wolds, who then served the recipes in the restaurant, Wold said. One of those is the taco meat recipe, which has just a handful of spices added to it but is delicious all the same.

“It’s not too spicy, in my opinion. It’s really easy to make … so sometimes I’ll make it for myself too, since from start to finish it takes maybe 20 minutes,” Wold said.

There is one surprise ingredient, though.

“One unusual thing it has in it is oatmeal. I don’t think you would normally see that in a taco meat recipe,” Wold said. “I think that was probably sort of a carryover thing since it was kind of the postwar era. There were shortages of things during the war, so a lot of people did unusual things with food to sort of extend it.”

The oatmeal gives the taco meat a nicer texture and it doesn’t fall apart as much, Wold says.

As the taco meat cooks, Wold spends that time chopping tomatoes and some spinach to add to the tacos, along with cheddar cheese and salsa. She prefers flour tortillas but will serve hard shells (and lettuce) when she makes tacos for others.

Odd’s Sombrero was sold in 1965 and Wold’s grandparents moved to Seattle. Wold said that her family isn’t sure if Macias’ family is still in Wickenburg, but it would be cool if they saw this and knew how beloved their taco meat recipe is today.

Odd’s Sombrero Taco Meat

Recipe submitted by Alexis Wold
New York, NY

Ingredients

  • 2 pounds ground beef
  • 6 cloves of garlic, crushed
  • 2 teaspoons of ground cumin
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons ground oregano
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
  • 1 tablespoon chili powder
  • 2 tablespoons paprika
  • 1/2 cup dry quick oatmeal
  • 2 cups of water

Directions

Brown the ground beef, then add the garlic and spices and stir well.

Stir in the oatmeal and water, then transfer to a greased casserole dish. Cover and bake at 300 degrees for about an hour.

Optional: For faster preparation, cooking can be completed on the stove-top, simmering until the water is absorbed and the mixture is thickened.

Serves 6 to 8.

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